Break line of sight first
When you reposition, make sure the seeker loses visual contact before you move across open space.
Tip Cards Guide
These tips help you survive longer as a hider without relying on one gimmick spot or one lucky pose.
Hider Playbook
When you reposition, make sure the seeker loses visual contact before you move across open space.
Choose props that feel normal in size, color, and placement for that specific area.
One nervous shuffle is often more suspicious than a slightly imperfect prop position.
Alternate between safe, bold, and mid-risk spots so good seekers cannot read your habits.
If the game lets you change or present different poses, make sure your silhouette fits nearby objects.
Think about how seekers enter and scan rooms. Hide where their first sweep will feel overloaded or ambiguous.
Sometimes the correct play is an early rotate, not a heroic last-second hold.
Mistakes to avoid
Advanced play
Hider Screenshots
MecchaChameleon.info
Using dark corners and shadows to avoid seekers.
Source: MecchaChameleon.info. If the embed does not load, use the source link above.
FAQ
Moving at the wrong time. A decent hiding spot fails instantly if you panic and move while the seeker is already reading your room.
No. Predictable spots work once, then become free catches. Rotate rooms, object sizes, and sightline angles.
Usually yes. A believable prop in normal traffic is often safer than a suspicious object hidden in an impossible corner.